Tom Conrad, CEO at Sonos; Holly Shelton, Chief Product Officer at Oura and Ann Crady Weiss, CEO at Hatch discuss consumer devices, AI integration and hardware innovation with Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman at Bloomberg Tech 2026 in San Francisco. (Source: Bloomberg)
Tom Conrad, CEO at Sonos; Holly Shelton, Chief Product Officer at Oura and Ann Crady Weiss, CEO at Hatch discuss consumer devices, AI integration and hardware innovation with Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman at Bloomberg Tech 2026 in San Francisco. (Source: Bloomberg)
Valve now says that the delayed Steam Machine PC and Steam Frame VR headset are set to launch sometime this summer. In a Thursday blog post detailing its Verified programs for both pieces of hardware, Valve concludes by saying that "We're excited for players to try your titles on the new Steam hardware once they launch this summer." When the company originally announced the Machine and Frame along...
Valve now says that the delayed Steam Machine PC and Steam Frame VR headset are set to launch sometime this summer. In a Thursday blog post detailing its Verified programs for both pieces of hardware, Valve concludes by saying that "We're excited for players to try your titles on the new Steam hardware once they launch this summer." When the company originally announced the Machine and Frame alongside its new Steam Controller late last year, it said that it would start shipping the new gadgets in early 2026. But in February , the company announced that the ongoing memory and storage crunch had forced it to revisit its pricing and shipping pl … Read the full story at The Verge.
The bombing might have slowed in the Middle East, but the ongoing conflict has led to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz – a major energy supply route – and the dropping of inflation bombs, driving up energy and commodity costs worldwide. The cost of living is rising in most countries, but it’s especially bad for low-income and developing nations where fuel and food supplies are disrupted. The wo...
The bombing might have slowed in the Middle East, but the ongoing conflict has led to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz – a major energy supply route – and the dropping of inflation bombs, driving up energy and commodity costs worldwide. The cost of living is rising in most countries, but it’s especially bad for low-income and developing nations where fuel and food supplies are disrupted. The worldwide inflation has also affected China primarily through increasing import costs and global...
Mira Murati, Co-Founder & CEO of Thinking Machines Lab, discusses the future of human-AI interaction, evolving AI products and the biggest opportunities ahead with Bloomberg’s Emily Chang at Bloomberg Tech 2026 in San Francisco. (Source: Bloomberg)
Mira Murati, Co-Founder & CEO of Thinking Machines Lab, discusses the future of human-AI interaction, evolving AI products and the biggest opportunities ahead with Bloomberg’s Emily Chang at Bloomberg Tech 2026 in San Francisco. (Source: Bloomberg)
watch now VIDEO 1:33 01:33 CrowdStrike CEO: We're taking care of our customers in an era where AI is pervasive and people need security Mad Money with Jim Cramer CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz said concerns surrounding AI-powered cyber threats are becoming a growing tailwind for the company, but investors expecting to see that impact in the first quarter were looking too soon. "You're talking about ...
watch now VIDEO 1:33 01:33 CrowdStrike CEO: We're taking care of our customers in an era where AI is pervasive and people need security Mad Money with Jim Cramer CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz said concerns surrounding AI-powered cyber threats are becoming a growing tailwind for the company, but investors expecting to see that impact in the first quarter were looking too soon. "You're talking about Mythos breaking in the middle of April. Our quarter ends at the end of April," Kurtz said on CNBC's "Mad Money" on Thursday. "We're selling enterprise software, not necessarily shipping boxes. So these things take time to get into customers' hands." CrowdStrike reported stronger-than-expected results Wednesday and raised its full-year outlook . However, shares fell 4% after some investors questioned why the heightened attention surrounding Anthropic's Mythos did not translate into a larger near-term boost to results. Kurtz said the company's updated guidance tells the more important story. CrowdStrike raised its full-year net new annual recurring revenue outlook by more than $50 million, reflecting growing confidence in customer demand. "We have the confidence to do that because we see the opportunity that's in front of us," Kurtz said. "We see what customers are looking for, which is CrowdStrike." The CEO said demand for the company's AI security offerings is accelerating as businesses look for ways to safely deploy artificial intelligence across their organizations. He said CrowdStrike's AI Detection and Response platform's second quarter pipeline had already exceeded $50 million, while growing 250% sequentially. "What I know from talking to customers is they want to roll out more AI," Kurtz said. "If you need more AI, you want to consume more AI, you're going to need security." Kurtz also pushed back on the idea that advances in AI will reduce the need for cybersecurity vendors. Instead, he argued that AI is making attackers more capable and increasing the need for compr...
keni1/iStock via Getty Images President Trump announced plans Thursday to direct hundreds of millions of dollars in funding to support U.S. coal-fired power plants and coal exports, with most of the funding coming from Cold War-era emergency powers. Trump invoked the Defense Production Act, a 1950 law granting presidents broad authority over industries deemed critical to national security, to fu...
keni1/iStock via Getty Images President Trump announced plans Thursday to direct hundreds of millions of dollars in funding to support U.S. coal-fired power plants and coal exports, with most of the funding coming from Cold War-era emergency powers. Trump invoked the Defense Production Act, a 1950 law granting presidents broad authority over industries deemed critical to national security, to fund $425M in upgrades to 13 coal-fired power plants and $75M to support the proposed West Gateway coal export terminal in California. Beneficiaries from the initiative include Duke Energy ( DUK ), Hallador Energy ( HNRG ) , Oklahoma Gas & Electric ( OGE ), and at least one subsidiary of American Electric Power ( AEP ), Bloomberg reported. The U.S. Department of Energy also said it finalized up to $350M in previously announced funding to help develop four coal facility projects, including new power plants in Alaska and West Virginia, after previously committing $175M for six previously announced projects to upgrade existing coal facilities. Shares of coal producers finished mostly higher Thursday: Peabody Energy ( BTU ) up 3.6%, Core Natural Resources ( CNR ) up 2.6%, Alliance Resource Partners ( ARLP ) up 2.3%, Ramaco Resources ( METC ) up 1.2%, Alpha Metallurgical Resources ( AMR ) up 1.1%, Warrior Met Coal ( HCC ) flat. At Thursday's event in the Oval Office, Trump was accompanied by Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, Energy Secretary Chris Wright, and governors Patrick Morrisey of West Virginia and Mark Gordon of Wyoming. Gordon, who recently visited Japan and Taiwan, said Asia is hungry for coal from Wyoming to support their own AI efforts, and that opening the California port is "absolutely essential for the lifeblood of our state," the top U.S. coal-producing state. More on Peabody Energy, Core Natural Resources and Alliance Resource Partners Peabody Energy Presents at B. Riley Securities 26th Annual Institutional Investor Conference - Slideshow Core Natural Resources...